No more delays!
Fila take positive action now on the PT Tae
Hwa case!
28 June 2005
Dear Friends,
This summer labor rights activists around
the world are joining together to take action
against the international sportswear brand
Fila -- including today at the Wimbledon
tennis championships. The Clean Clothes
Campaign (CCC), together with its allies,
has planned a series of protests targetting
US-based Fila because of their failure to
act on their responsibilities toward the
Indonesian workers who made their sport
shoes. In the UK, activists will stage a
naked tennis match at Wimbledon to draw
attention to Fila's failure to play fair
on workers' rights.
To our knowledge Fila has done nothing
to assist the workers of PT Tae Hwa, an
Indonesian factory that produced Fila sports
shoes for a decade. These workers lost their
jobs in February and still have not received
money that is owed to them. How can Fila
turn its back on these workers?
When thousands of workers, mainly women,
showed up for work on February 11th, they
found PT Tae Hwa in Tangerang, Indonesia,
shut down. Suddenly they were unemployed,
and now months later they have not yet received
the back wages or the compensation they
are entitled to. Their right to compensation
was reaffirmed by the Indonesian courts
on May 2, 2005. In the past these workers
had also endured numerous violations of
their rights: sexual harassment, verbal
abuse, inadequate wages, compulsory overtime,
unreasonable production targets, and denial
of trade union rights.
July 2007 Update, No
Response from FILA
For more than two years the CCC has publicly
called upon the US-sportswear brand FILA
to ensure proper compensation for the women
and men who lost their jobs when FILA supplier
PT Tae Hwa shut down in 2005.To date FILA
has failed to respond to our requests for
action in relation to the closure of their
Indonesian sports shoe supplier.
Take Action Now!
Parkati made Fila
sportshoes in the Tae Hwa factory in
Indonesia for 7 years.
Since February the
Clean Clothes Campaign and representatives
of other labor rights organizations have
tried repeatedly to contact Robert Erb,
Fila's chief marketing officer, to get clarification
on why the factory closed and to demand
that Fila take action to ensure that the
workers are paid their back wages and compensation.
To date, Fila has not responded or taken
any action to meet these demands.
This summer protests exposing Fila's poor
labor rights record are scheduled to take
place in several countries, including the
UK, the Netherlands, Australia, and Sweden.
Join these activists and give your support
to the Tae Hwa workers by pressuring Fila
to take positive action on this case. Specifically,
urge Fila to:
clarify its role
in the closure of the PT Tae Hwa factory;
ensure that the
PT Tae Hwa workers are paid the back pay
that they are owed;
ensure that the
PT Tae Hwa workers are paid the compensation
owed to them and granted by the Indonesian
courts on May 2, 2005 without further
appeal by the employer, and
play an active
role in getting the PT Tae Hwa workers
new jobs.
SAMPLE LETTER
Please adapt and
send a letter to Fila today!
See the sample letter below:
Remember to send copies of your letters
and any responses to the Clean Clothes Campaign
Use this form to send the following letter
directly to:
Robert Erb
Chief Marketing Officer
Sport Brands International/Fila
8 West 40th Street, 14th floor
New York, NY 10018, United States
e-mail: rerb@sportbrandsinternational.com
CC: Clean Clothes
Campaign
Dear Mr. Erb,
I am writing you
to express my concern regarding the situation
of workers from the PT Tae Hwa factory in
Tangerang, Indonesia, that was making sportswear
articles for Fila. I have been informed
by the Clean Clothes Campaign that these
workers arrived at the factory on February
11, 2005, and found the factory closed and
the owners nowhere to be found. Thousands
of now unemployed Tae Hwa workers were informed
that the company had sold all its equipment,
but no other reliable information was given.
Obviously, the workers
are distressed by their difficult situation
and now face great hardship due to this
unexpected termination of their employment.
Although the cause of the factory's closure
remains unclear, it is clear that Fila has
a responsibility to these thousands of workers
who were producing goods for Fila right
up to the last day before the factory closed.
Non-governmental labor rights organizations
and trade unions from around the world have
tried repeatedly to contact Fila to resolve
this issue and to date there has not been
any response. Why?
I find Fila's lack
of positive action on this case unacceptable.
Please do not delay any longer, Fila must
take the following steps immediately:
clarify its role
in the closure of the PT Tae Hwa factory;
ensure that the
PT Tae Hwa workers are paid the back pay
that they are owed;
ensure that the
PT Tae Hwa workers are paid the compensation
owed to them and granted by the Indonesian
courts on 2nd May 2005 without further
appeal by the employer, and
play an active
role in getting the PT Tae Hwa workers
new jobs.
Please let me know
what steps Fila will take to ensure that
the demands listed above are met.
July 2007, No Response
from FILA
For more than two years the CCC has publicly called upon
the US-sportswear brand FILA to ensure proper compensation
for the women and men who lost their jobs when FILA supplier
PT Tae Hwa shut down in 2005.To date FILA has failed to
respond to our requests for action in relation to the
closure of their Indonesian sports shoe supplier.